Slayground | |
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Directed by | Terry Bedford |
Screenplay by | Trevor Preston |
Based on | Slayground by Donald E. Westlake |
Produced by | John Dark Gower Frost |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Stephen Smith |
Edited by | Nick Gaster |
Music by | Colin Towns |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Columbia-EMI-Warner Distributors |
Release date |
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Running time | 89 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $5 million [1] |
Slayground is a 1983 British crime thriller film directed by Terry Bedford and starring Peter Coyote, Mel Smith and Billie Whitelaw. [2] The screenplay was by Trevor Preston, adapted from Slayground, the 14th Parker novel (1971) by Donald E. Westlake (as Richard Stark).
The film was developed by Barry Spikins when he was heard of EMI Films. In early 1983 Spikings left and Verity Lambert was appointed head of production. [3] Slayground became the first movie part of Lambert's slate of films. [4] She later said, I wasn't very keen, but I thought, "Well, I’m starting off and this is definitely different to television and maybe I have to go by somebody else’s judgement". She claimed the distributors were convinced the film would be a commercial hit. [5]
Others in Lamber's slate included Comfort and Joy , Illegal Aliens (which became Morons from Outer Space ) and Dreamchild . [6] [7]
Filming on Slayground had finished by November 1983. "I believe all these films have international appeal," said Lambert. [8]
Academic Paul Moody wrote in his story of EMI Films that Slayground "marks a transition point in EMI’s history, both literally and metaphorically, and it has a liminal feel to it that betrays its origins from two diver- gent production strategies." He felt the fact the second half of the film moving to England was "a metaphorical handing over of the baton... a dramatic shift in tone from what had until then been a pedestrian American thriller, bringing in supernatural elements that shift the film towards a more English gothic sensibility." Moody felt "the film has some genuinely atmospheric moments and marks the point at which historically, EMI transitioned back towards making films set in Britain and which focused specifically on British culture." [9]
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: " Flashdance meets film noir for this disappointingly lame front-runner from the new EMI stable. A directing début for Terry Bedford, formerly lighting cameraman for Adrian Lyne then for Monty Python and the Holy Grail and Jabberwocky , and now teamed with commercials cameraman Stephen Smith, Slayground is full of portentous camerawork that loads even a simple bus-stop arrival with heavily irrelevant suspense. ... Slayground offers a beginner's course in customary crimethriller images, culminating in the fairground shoot-out, all ho-ho masks and halls of mirrors, for those who may have forgotten how these things always used to be done. Littered with fashionably upright corpses, the film offers the ultimate affront in the concept of its gloating, faceless killer, fountaining bullets as from the hosepipe of a demented gardener (our team has scrupulously noted Assault on Precinct 13 along with Lady from Shanghai and Bugsy Malone), and almost as immune to retaliation as the bogeyman in Halloween. Rather as with the mystery girl at the start – and, for that matter, the film's title itself – his presence seems to mean something but nobody, it appears, could quite remember what." [10]
Leslie Halliwell said: "One of those tedious and violent films in which the criminal wins out; slickness seems to make it worse." [11]
Verity Ann Lambert was an English television and film producer.
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Payroll is a 1961 British neo-noir crime thriller film directed by Sidney Hayers and starring Michael Craig, Françoise Prévost, and Billie Whitelaw. The screenplay by George Baxt was adapted from Derek Bickerton's 1959 novel of the same name. The film revolves around a group of criminals who plan and execute a wages robbery, which ultimately ends in disaster. The movie is one of the most highly regarded crime films from Anglo-Amalgamated.
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